Consumer‐grade biosensor validation for examining stress in healthcare professionals

Introduction A high prevalence of stress and burnout has been reported among healthcare professionals; however, the current tools utilized to quantify such metrics are not in keeping with doctors’ busy lifestyles, and moreover do not comply with infection prevention policies. Given that increased st...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physiological reports 2020-06, Vol.8 (11), p.e14454-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Hopkins, Luke, Stacey, Benjamin, Robinson, David B. T., James, Osian P., Brown, Christopher, Egan, Richard J., Lewis, Wyn G., Bailey, Damian M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction A high prevalence of stress and burnout has been reported among healthcare professionals; however, the current tools utilized to quantify such metrics are not in keeping with doctors’ busy lifestyles, and moreover do not comply with infection prevention policies. Given that increased stress can subsequently impact both the healthcare profession and the patient in care, this study aimed to assess the validity of a wearable biosensor to monitor and manage stress experienced by healthcare professionals. Methods In all, 12 healthy, male volunteers completed an incremental exercise protocol to volitional exhaustion, which aimed to induce physiological stress in a graded manner. A wearable consumer‐grade biosensor (Vital Scout, VivaLNK, Inc.) was used to measure stress, energy expenditure, respiration rate, and activity throughout the exercise protocol. These variables were validated against online breath‐by‐breath analysis (MedGraphics Ultima Series). Results When compared against online “gold standard” measurements, the Vital Scout biosensor demonstrated a high level of accuracy to measure energy expenditure (r = .776, p 
ISSN:2051-817X
DOI:10.14814/phy2.14454